As European nations address their legacy of colonialism, museums in France, Germany, Great Britain, and elsewhere in Western Europe are examining the provenance of objects in their collections that were removed during periods of colonial occupation and, in some cases, have developed plans for their restitution.Footnote 1 As of 2022, few museums in the United States have announced similar objectives.Footnote 2 Neither the American Alliance of Museums (AAM) nor the Association of Art Museum Directors (AAMD)—the non-profit organizations that establish best practices for North American museums—has yet issued guidelines for colonial-era provenance research.Footnote 3 Colonialism in this context may be defined as the occupation by one power (usually a government) over a group of independent people, which often leads to exploitative conditions.Footnote 4 Under such conditions, particularly in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, military troops, officials of the occupying government, missionaries, scientists, and private collectors acquired and removed works of art from colonized areas. Many of these works of art went into museums that were owned and operated by the occupying power. The possession and display of these objects is thus inextricable from the very act of colonization, and the retention of them by museums today is seen by many as an ongoing injustice that needs to be redressed.Footnote 5
In the United States, where state-owned museums are rare, the situation is different.Footnote 6 Though there are some exceptions, American art museums were founded with privately owned collections and not through government-sponsored expeditions.Footnote 7 Much of the artwork in American museums was purchased on the market, either directly by the museum or indirectly through its donors. Taking a more circuitous path, objects from colonized areas that are today in US museums may not be well documented, and, in some cases, their provenance has been forgotten or erased completely. The link between the display of these works of art and the act of colonization is less readily apparent than it is at many European institutions. Despite these differences, however, it has become clear that, if American museums are prepared to acknowledge and rectify historical losses from Europe (for example, Holocaust-era thefts and the trafficking of Classical antiquities), they need to also consider historical losses from other parts of the world. If museums have policies that preclude collecting works of art known to have been stolen, they must reconcile those policies with colonial-era thefts.
This article offers specific suggestions for art museums in the United States to proceed proactively and transparently with colonial-era provenance research projects. I propose that museums identify objects in their collections that were displaced in one of two ways: either looted during a post-Napoleonic military conflict or stolen or traded by force under a period of colonial occupation. These works of art should be prioritized for provenance research and listed or otherwise made discoverable online. These suggestions reflect the practices that were developed in 2021 and are presently being implemented at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA). It is hoped that an explanation of the reasoning behind the MFA’s procedures will be useful to other American collecting institutions seeking to begin similar projects.
The Sarr-Savoy report and African art
The conversation about colonialism and restitution is not new, but it was galvanized in 2018 when scholars Felwine Sarr and Bénédicte Savoy issued the report The Restitution of African Cultural Heritage: Toward a New Relational Ethics, which had been commissioned by French President Emmanuel Macron.Footnote 8 The Sarr-Savoy report focuses on works of art from sub-Saharan African countries in French public collections, of which the authors estimate there are at least 90,000.Footnote 9 The report recommends the return of those African works of art that were removed from their place of origin during armed conflicts as well as under colonial rule, presuming that nearly all such transactions were made under duress.Footnote 10 It also recommends the restitution of anything trafficked after a former colony achieved independence. The report immediately garnered international attention. It was published the same year that the movie Black Panther came out, in which the character Erik Killmonger famously asks the curator of African Art at the (fictional) Museum of Great Britain: “How do you think your ancestors got these [artifacts]? Do you think they paid a fair price? Or did they take it, like they took everything else?” The year 2018 also saw protests at American art museums calling to decolonize and “repatriate imperial plunder.”Footnote 11 All of these events in the span of one year quickly heightened public consciousness about the presence of looted African art in museums throughout Europe and North America.
The publication of the Sarr-Savoy report raised the question of how best to examine the provenance of African art and whether to restitute some or even all of it from museum collections. Since that time, the media has probed the topic of the looting of African art, sometimes eliding the boundaries between ethical issues, such as colonial-era plunder, and legal problems, like recent theft and trafficking from African nations.Footnote 12 The AAMD established an African Art Working Group to consider issues of provenance research and potential repatriation to African countries.Footnote 13 American museum colleagues have also been gathering formally and informally to discuss best practices for African collections.Footnote 14 For most museums seeking to address colonial-era provenance, however, a focus on Africa will be too narrow. African nations were not the only areas of the world subject to colonization and related art theft. Moreover, asking whether and how to restitute African art—and only African art—suggests that it is somehow separate from the global art canon, so much so that it merits its own set of collecting rules and guidelines.
To be sure, there are inequities in the art world that have led to the disproportionate displacement of African art. The market already treats sub-Saharan African art differently than art from Europe, North America, Asia, and even North African countries like Egypt, particularly where due diligence is concerned. In 2020, for example, two Nigerian Igbo statues that were alleged to have been pillaged during the Biafran War (1967–70) were auctioned at Christie’s, which otherwise coordinates the settlement of claims for objects taken during twentieth-century periods of conflict.Footnote 15 The sale of allegedly stolen sculptures was almost certainly not an isolated incident; I have been informed (if anecdotally) by colleagues that stolen African art has been sold in the past through major auction houses without protest. This sale, however, received international press attention and proceeded in the face of great outcry, particularly on social media.Footnote 16
Indeed, unlike most artwork of European origin, illicit African art may change hands publicly and with few attempts to conceal its origins. In 2012, the MFA received a large bequest that included eight works of art stolen, illicitly excavated, or illegally exported from Nigeria and two Djenné terracottas trafficked from Mali. They had all been purchased by museum benefactor William Teel from established dealers in Europe and the United States. Some were accompanied by obviously falsified paperwork, while others came with information stating precisely when and by whom they had been removed from their original location. This information was presumably offered by the dealers to attest to the objects’ authenticity but without any regard for their legality. The MFA restituted the objects to Nigeria and Mali in 2014 and 2022, respectively.Footnote 17 Nevertheless, repatriations to sub-Saharan Africa remain rare in the United States; the museum even faced criticism for returning stolen art to Nigeria in 2014.Footnote 18 The publicity surrounding these returns only highlighted their relative rarity.Footnote 19
The language used to discuss African art also differs from what is used for so-called “fine art” or “antiquities,” terms that usually describe artwork from North America, Europe, the ancient Near East, and parts of East Asia. Many auction houses and galleries continue to market material from Africa, Central and South America, and Indigenous North America as “ethnographic” or even “tribal” rather than fine art, regardless of its function or age.Footnote 20 Stolen art may slip through the cracks of these so-called ethnographic sales not just because they tend to command relatively less prestige and visibility, which often prompt due diligence, but also because of the belief, still held by many, that certain communities of origin cannot properly care for their own cultural property; therefore, it is better that even stolen art is “saved” to be appreciated in Western collections.Footnote 21 A term often used in the provenance of African and Oceanic art, conveying that it was removed from its place of origin at a particular point in time, is “collected in situ.” This term is otherwise used for the collecting of biological, botanical, and natural specimens.Footnote 22 Its continued use in the provenance of African art not only does little to inform an object’s collecting history, but it also subtly implies that certain kinds of cultural property may be taken, like ethnographic or scientific data, to enhance the body of knowledge of European and American scholarship and, therefore, ostensibly for the greater good.Footnote 23
It is important that African art not continue to be singled out and assigned its own set of collecting ethics, due diligence standards, or vocabulary, either by the art trade through its comparative lack of vigilance or by the American museum community when considering provenance research and restitution. Rather than view African art as a monolith in light of the Sarr-Savoy report, museums and the market should begin by increasing awareness of the imbalances that already exist in the art world and correcting them. Art market participants must ensure that they apply the same standards of due diligence to African objects that they do to works of art from elsewhere, refusing to buy or sell anything known to be illegally excavated, stolen, or exported in contravention of the law. There is no separate body of stolen property legislation or universal set of museum collecting ethics that applies to art from the African continent. If buyers are wary of triggering the National Stolen Property Act when acquiring antiquities from Italy, they must be equally conscious of their exposure under the law when accepting treasures from African nations.Footnote 24 The widely accepted use of the 1970 UNESCO Convention as a provenance threshold for archaeological objects (promulgated for American museums in the AAMD’s Guidelines of 2008 and 2013) naturally extends to Nok and Djenné terracottas, Ife heads, and other excavated African material.Footnote 25
Just as art museums must apply uniform legal and ethical standards to new acquisitions regardless of culture and source country, so too must they take a holistic approach to colonial-era provenance. Any museum-wide plan for provenance research and potential restitution will necessarily apply to each curatorial department. The staff in an African art department cannot uphold one set of practices, while curators of Asian and Near Eastern art uphold another. Such behavior would be in flagrant disregard of any museum policy that seeks to establish a consistent, professional standard in collecting. Not only does a focus on the provenance of sub-Saharan African art uphold—rather than correct—long-standing inequities in the art world (that is, African art is different, and so different rules apply), it will also present uncomfortable challenges for any museum trying to reconcile these new practices with their institutional collection policy.
German museum guidelines
Not all European countries addressing colonial-era provenance have focused on Africa. The same year that the Sarr-Savoy report was published, in 2018, the German Museum Association issued a seminal set of museum guidelines for colonial-era provenance research—the Guidelines on Dealing with Collections from Colonial Contexts—which were revised in 2019 and 2021. These recommendations, the first and most comprehensive of their kind, urge heightened awareness and scrutiny for objects that changed hands during all formal (that is, governmental) periods of colonization as well as under other inequitable power structures and for works of art that reflect colonialist thinking or stereotypes.Footnote 26 The German guidelines address a much broader set of criteria than the Sarr-Savoy report does and encourage museums to study and rethink how they discuss colonial-era object histories.
Are the German guidelines a useful roadmap for encyclopedic American museums? The parameters of formal colonization are made clear; the guidelines provide an exhaustive chart of colonized areas and dates of their occupation by foreign entities. Not all periods of colonial occupation are equally controversial, however; objects excavated in Egypt under sixteenth-century Ottoman rule are surely not meant to be the priority today when considering historical wrongs. It is also difficult to define which power structures are inequitable and how far back the guidelines are intended to reach. “Oppression and exploitation” may, as the guidelines state, describe an imbalance of power, but without further clarification or a timeframe, this subjective category could be understood to extend back centuries and apply to any number of situations. The guidelines address restitution, regarding it appropriate “when the circumstances of acquisition appear wrong from today’s point of view.”Footnote 27 Thus, not all transactions are presumed to have been made under duress, but the guidelines stop short of defining “wrong.” The German guidelines serve as a useful reference, but they are, I would argue, overly broad in scope and open to too much interpretation to serve as a standalone document. Such latitude runs the risk of vastly divergent interpretations and uneven results, particularly at American museums, which already vary widely in size, governance, mission, and collecting strategy.
Defining colonial-era provenance
The critical question for American museums is what, exactly, is meant by colonial-era provenance. Should museums prioritize their research by geography (African nations), time period (the parameters of formal colonial rule), or circumstance (inequitable power structures, regardless of geography or time period)? I propose that the answer lies in a combination of all three. The Sarr-Savoy report and the German museum guidelines both discuss a spectrum of coercive conditions in colonial-era transactions. It can be presumed that wartime plunder is at one end of that spectrum since it is self-evident that in such circumstances there was no agency on the part of the owners in disposing of their property. Objects made for trade or sale may be placed at the other end of that spectrum as full agency on the part of the sellers can be presupposed. The ethics of these two situations are fairly clear; in fact, the presence of a colonial power is probably immaterial in both instances.
It is the events that fall in between these two extremes for which the presence of an occupying power undoubtedly makes the greatest difference. With this power in place, those who are colonized may have a very limited ability to regulate the trade in, or, indeed, exert control over, their own cultural property. An egregious act like the stripping of an actively used temple by colonial officials, for example, may have been considered fully permissible under the rule of the occupiers. But if it was technically a legal act, the property was not freely given. To take another example, thousands of archaeological objects in American museums were scientifically excavated and exported with the permission of colonial governments.Footnote 28 It would be difficult to define these excavations as thefts. Nevertheless, many would undoubtedly recognize the power imbalances that led to the removal of these objects from their source countries. The stripping of a temple and the excavation of an archaeological site, arguably, are situated at different ends of the spectrum of duress conditions, but, in both situations, power inequities led to the dispersal of works of art from their original communities. When examining colonial-era provenance, museums will therefore need to consider to what extent they wish to acknowledge the legitimacy of an occupying force—from an ethical, rather than a strictly legal, viewpoint—and how to interpret those laws and authorizations that permitted the displacement of the cultural heritage of those who were colonized.
With these issues in mind, I propose that American museums identify objects in their collections that were stolen, plundered, or otherwise sold or given under duress during nineteenth- and twentieth-century armed conflicts and periods of colonial occupation. I propose that museums prioritize and identify those objects that may be considered wrongfully taken or traded, using ethical rather than legal parameters. Most museums would say, and perhaps even specify in their collection policies, that they do not collect or keep stolen or forcibly sold property.Footnote 29 But how museums define “stolen” can be elusive, and restitutions from American collecting institutions have been predicated, to date, on factors like the ratification of international conventions (particularly the 1970 UNESCO Convention), precedents in US case law, and the implementation of foreign legislation in the twentieth century.Footnote 30 Generally, nineteenth-century thefts and questionable transactions that took place under colonial governments have not been addressed because they often fall into a gray zone, occupying a space outside the present legal framework governing American institutions.
Of the two categories mentioned above, the first—pillage—is relatively easy to define as the theft of property during armed conflict and will be discussed further below. The more difficult category to define is that of artwork wrongfully taken or coercively traded under colonialism. The Sarr-Savoy report raises the question: if a government official, missionary, or dealer obtained a work of art during a period of colonial occupation, can we presume duress to such an extent that their acquisition should be considered invalid? In other words, should everything removed under colonial rule be returned, regardless of where it falls on the spectrum of duress? The answer cannot be an unequivocal yes; it will inevitably depend on the object and the circumstances of its removal. Responsible resolutions to ownership claims—regardless of country of origin and time period—can only be based on available information and not on the lack thereof. The question of duress, which frequently comes up in Holocaust-era claims, is difficult to answer even when there is a paper trail, a record of the price paid, and an understanding of the seller’s life circumstances.Footnote 31 For colonial-era transactions, museums are unlikely to have all of these data points, making the research even more challenging.
Some initial questions can be formulated to guide the process of researching colonial-era provenance. The most obvious one is whether the object can be shown to have left its place of origin during a period of colonial or occupation rule. European museums may have records of exactly when and where colonial collectors obtained their artifacts. Many, if not most, American museums are frequently going to lack that information, and the question of duress may not be able to proceed further. It should be kept in mind, too, that enterprising dealers have long told buyers that their wares could be traced to a colonial collector, when in fact such statements were aspirational and given in order to enhance prestige or otherwise assure the object’s authenticity or legality. By necessity, museums will need to prioritize those works of art whose dates and means of removal can be credibly established.
If an object’s removal can be traced to a period of colonization, then the next consideration is the likelihood that it was given or sold freely, without coercion or exploitation. Ultimately, this may not be answerable, and there is no single rule or set of criteria that can apply in order to make this determination. In certain cases, it may be known precisely where a work of art came from—for example, sculptures were removed from documented architectural ensembles, sold, and taken to collections in Europe, the United States, and elsewhere. In such cases, it may be possible to identify the owner of the building, consider whether that person (or anyone else) was authorized to remove and sell parts of it, and determine where and how other pieces traveled, keeping in mind that some monuments were dismantled or dispersed, at least in part, before the advent of colonization.Footnote 32
Additional questions to consider are whether there have already been studies of colonial collecting in the area and, if so, what those studies have shown. In what is now Papua New Guinea, for instance, a market with European travelers flourished by the second half of the nineteenth century, when the removal and acquisition of many museum objects can be documented.Footnote 33 Firsthand accounts by foreign collectors have given some indications of which types of objects were frequently and enthusiastically offered for sale or trade there and which were not.Footnote 34 Some ethnographers and missionaries left diaries or papers revealing instances of deliberate destruction and looting (of religious buildings, for example) or collecting by force.Footnote 35 Just as there may be “red flag” names when studying Nazi-era provenance and the antiquities trade, so too will there be red-flag collectors in the former colonies.
An understanding of the condition, function, and life cycle of the object itself will also be critical to assessing colonial-era transactions. How was the object intended to be used? Was it utilitarian, or did it have spiritual or ritual significance? If it had a ritual function, how likely is it that it was disposed of willingly? Many areas were converted en masse by Christian missionaries; might the object have been abandoned or traded after conversion, or was it more likely taken away (or fell into disuse) in order to enforce a new belief system? Could the object be freely disposed of by an individual, or was it inalienable and therefore unable to be traded at all?Footnote 36 Was it meant to be preserved in perpetuity—for example, on a grave or memorial—or was it typically destroyed or discarded when no longer needed? Some masks from the Pacific Islands, for instance, were made of natural materials and were left to decay after the conclusion of their ritual use.Footnote 37 An object’s condition can also help the researcher understand when and why it may have left its community of origin. Some objects endured extensive wear and even damage during use, but, if the condition is pristine, it could signal that the object was not used at all and was instead commissioned or produced specifically for the market.Footnote 38
Questions like those posed above are not intended to be comprehensive, nor do I mean to suggest that the answer to any one of them is an indication of duress or lack thereof. There is no single set of facts that can, in every case, establish whether or not an object was forcibly traded. Nevertheless, the above questions suggest how, in many instances, evaluating the validity of colonial-era acquisitions will hinge on an understanding of the age, function, and ongoing significance of the objects themselves just as much as their collecting history. It will be up to museums to research each case study individually and begin to identify those objects that are the highest priority for further scrutiny.
Looting during conflict
Among the highest-profile art restitution claims are those for objects whose provenance is clear and can be situated at the far end of the spectrum of duress conditions—namely, those objects looted during conflict. Regardless of the presence of a colonial power, there can be no question of consent in parting with property that was pillaged. The quintessential example of this category, and the one that has received the most press attention in recent years, are the ivory and brass sculptures that British troops plundered from the Royal Palace at Benin City (present-day Nigeria) in 1897.Footnote 39 The 1860 looting of the Yuanmingyuan, or Summer Palace, in Beijing has also resulted in long-standing, high-profile claims for objects at auction and in museum collections.Footnote 40 The British plunder of Maqdala, Ethiopia, in 1868 and of Kumasi, present-day Ghana, in 1873–74 likewise remain contentious, although the objects that were taken have not been dispersed as widely and remain, primarily, in the United Kingdom.Footnote 41
Even if the provenance of these works of art is not disputed, at the time they were looted there were no formal international frameworks to protect cultural property or prohibit art plunder during times of war. Today, there may be no legal way to redress these instances of pillage, and the current country of origin may not even have existed at the time of the conflict. If American museums begin to consider the restitution of these objects, will they be grafting a twenty-first-century mindset, which abhors and prohibits wartime looting, onto earlier sensibilities? Some are quick to claim that plunder during wartime has always been the norm, and, for that reason, there is no need to address war loot in museum collections. Nevertheless, European attitudes regarding pillage changed dramatically over the course of the nineteenth century.Footnote 42 It is worth reviewing these changes in light of current conversations about museums, colonialism, armed conflict, and restitution.
France expropriated foreign artwork broadly during the Revolutionary Wars and most notoriously under Napoleon, yet this activity was controversial even at the time. The looting of another sovereign nation’s cultural property was increasingly viewed as barbaric during the age of Enlightenment. As early as 1796, art theorist Antoine Quatremère de Quincy argued that removing artwork from Italy was detrimental to civilization.Footnote 43 Many in Britain decried the “robbery and plunder” that enhanced the collections of the Louvre under Napoleon.Footnote 44 Following the fall of the French Empire in 1815, artwork taken from Italy, Belgium, and elsewhere was restituted, albeit unevenly.Footnote 45 Yet this large-scale restitution effort set a new precedent in Europe, making clear that art plunder during conflict would no longer be the norm. Following the fall of France, the Allies did not raid French collections in retaliation.Footnote 46
As European jurists codified the rules of war over the course of the nineteenth century, they specifically sought to prohibit the looting of artwork. This effort was largely in response to Napoleonic plunder.Footnote 47 English military laws of 1868 and 1884, though somewhat contradictory on this point, prohibited pillage and sanctioned the taking of artwork only in cases of military retaliation.Footnote 48 In 1874, the Brussels Declaration (signed but not ratified by Great Britain, France, Germany, The Netherlands, and Italy, among other nations), specified that
an army of occupation can only take possession of … movable property belonging to the State which may be used for the operations of the war. … The property of municipalities, that of institutions dedicated to religion, charity and education, the arts and sciences even when State property, shall be treated as private property. All seizure or destruction of, or willful damage to, institutions of this character, historic monuments, works of art and science should be made the subject of legal proceedings by the competent authorities. … Pillage is formally forbidden.Footnote 49
This prohibition of the taking of enemy property not needed for military purposes and the specific protection of artwork was based on Francis Lieber’s 1863 Instructions for the Government of Armies of the United States in the Field, which had governed Union soldiers during the American Civil War.Footnote 50 The Brussels Declaration, however, was international, and it served as the model for the 1899 Convention with Respect to the Laws and Customs of War on Land or first Hague Convention.Footnote 51 This was one of several treaties that came out of the international peace conference held in The Hague that year, with 26 signatories, including the United States, the major powers of Europe, Japan, Persia, and the Ottoman Empire. The Hague Convention formally codified the rules of warfare on an international level. Regarding cultural property, it repeated the Brussels Declaration almost verbatim: “Private property cannot be confiscated. … The property of the communes, that of religious, charitable, and educational institutions, and those of arts and science, even when State property, shall be treated as private property. All seizure of, and destruction, or intentional damage done to such institutions, to historical monuments, works of art or science, is prohibited, and should be made the subject of proceedings. … Pillage is formally prohibited.”Footnote 52 The second Hague Convention of 1907 expanded upon the treaties of 1899 but left unchanged the passages on pillage and the protection of cultural heritage.Footnote 53
By the second half of the nineteenth century, the United States and most European countries had agreed either formally or informally to protect works of art and cultural property during armed conflict and to prohibit pillage in any event. Even if, in certain cases, it was still defensible for the victorious party to take spoils of war on behalf of their nation, by the second half of the nineteenth century, indiscriminate looting by soldiers was not.Footnote 54 Nevertheless, these rules “between civilized nations” were not practiced or enforced consistently, particularly when fighting took place outside of Europe—that is to say, on the soil of nations that many Europeans did not consider “civilized.”Footnote 55
For the sake of argument, the definition of “works of art” may be debated. Were the items taken from heritage sites at Beijing, Maqdala, Kumasi, Benin City, and elsewhere considered artistic property by the looters—and therefore taken in contravention of the norms of the time—or were they seen as legitimate spoils of war?Footnote 56 There is no straightforward answer. European troops did take luxury goods and other works of art for the state, whether for the government or to be auctioned off to benefit the troops.Footnote 57 Nevertheless, the boundary between war prize and collectible was fluid. During the two Opium Wars in China (1839–42 and 1856–60), soldiers removed clothing from dead bodies not out of any military necessity but, rather, because they personally valued Chinese textiles.Footnote 58 The looting of the Yuanmingyuan may have been motivated by a desire to demonstrate French and British power over China, but there can be no doubt that Chinese textiles, ceramics, and enamels were considered art objects once they were taken to England and France. They were sold by fine arts auctioneers like Christie, Manson and Woods and Hôtel Drouot, they were the focus of museum exhibitions, and they exerted demonstrable influence over European design.Footnote 59 Indeed, a provenance of “from the Summer Palace” was considered prestigious, a mark of authenticity, and a signifier of so-called “imperial taste.”Footnote 60
A comparable blurring of the lines between war prize and art object followed the British attacks on Maqdala and even Benin City. At Maqdala, troops plundered manuscripts as enemy property, describing them as “royally illuminated.”Footnote 61 They took treasury objects, several of which were sold by a plundering soldier to Richard Holmes of the British Museum, the archaeologist of the expedition. Holmes bought extensively at the subsequent auction of the Maqdala loot, and, as a result, the British Museum received some 350 Ethiopian manuscripts.Footnote 62 The pillage of thousands of brass plaques and ivories from Benin is well known, documented, and even photographed. Reginald Bacon, whose firsthand account, Benin: The City of Blood, published in 1897, helped to establish Benin’s notoriety in England as a supposedly violent and savage place, nevertheless wrote: “Buried in the dirt of ages were several hundred brass plaques, suggestive of almost Egyptian design, but of really superb casting. Castings of wonderful delicacy of detail, and some magnificently carved tusks … bracelets suggestive of Chinese work and two magnificent bronze leopards.”Footnote 63
Like items from the Yuanmingyuan, the bronzes and ivories were auctioned in England and featured in several museum exhibitions, much to the astonishment of critics, who did not believe that the people of Benin could have developed such technical skills on their own.Footnote 64 These objects taken from conflicts in Asia and Africa were not burned along with buildings as soldiers fled, nor did troops take a small selection of items. Rather, collections were removed on a vast scale, then exhibited and sold through traditional fine art venues. In this way, these foreign-made objects entered the European canon of art history. Troops justified the rampant taking of enemy artwork at a time when such activity was otherwise censured by pointing, either implicitly or explicitly, to their own relative enlightenment and cultural superiority. During the Opium Wars, the British looted Chinese temples, rationalizing their behavior by mocking the religion and casting doubt on the piety of the worshipers. In the words of Reverend MacGhee, an army chaplain, “John Chinaman is not at all of a religious turn of mind, he very seldom goes to ‘Chin-chin’ or pays his respects to his peculiar divinity. … We have constantly occupied their temples, and they never seem to care much about it, and only in some cases took the trouble to remove their deities; not that we generally disturbed their very ugly images, although I have seen a statue of Confucius at Canton forced to smoke a very short clay pipe, which he did not seem to like.”Footnote 65 British accounts of the sacking of Benin City—including Bacon’s City of Blood and Alan Boisragon’s The Benin Massacre (1897)—sensationally described cannibalism, human sacrifice, and infanticide in a society that, they both specifically noted, was isolated from white men.Footnote 66 Such narratives painted a picture so gruesome that the plundering of Benin’s artwork (admired by Bacon but “hideous” according to Boisragon) became an inextricable part of the colonialist narrative—that is to say, rescuing the natives from their own violent and uncivilized culture.Footnote 67
Works of art from Beijing and Benin were called “ugly” and “hideous” spoils of war, yet, at the same time, they clearly had aesthetic value and were considered suitable for museums and galleries. An obvious contradiction exists between the characterization of these objects as symbols of military victory and subjugation and their commodification, admiration, and public display as works of art. In 1903, Henry Ling Roth devoted no fewer than two chapters to the art of Benin in his copiously illustrated Great Benin, commenting that the bronzes “hold their own among some of the best specimens of antiquity or modern times.”Footnote 68 He admired them so greatly that, in an appendix, he lamented Britain’s loss of some of the most valuable and interesting examples to German buyers. Despite its large collection, he wrote, the British Museum was “deprived of its lawful acquisitions. … It is especially annoying to Englishmen to think that such articles, which for every reason should be retained in this country, have been allowed to go abroad.”Footnote 69 While he elevated Benin bronzes and ivories to the level of fine art, if not masterworks, he simultaneously classified them as spoils, their plunder entirely justifiable for the greater good of England.Footnote 70
The response to the pillaging that took place in China during the Boxer Rebellion (1899–1901) marked a change in norms. Looting by European, American, and Japanese troops, missionaries, and others lasted for months. While objects taken from the Yuanmingyuan in 1860 were immediately exhibited and sold publicly, comparable exhibitions and auctions did not take place in the early twentieth century.Footnote 71 Nor did the provenance “from the Boxer Rebellion” achieve the same level of prestige as “from the Summer Palace.” Some captains ordered the return of personal property that was looted, and troops were dishonorably discharged for their plundering activities.Footnote 72 By this date, the 1899 Hague Convention had been signed. Pillage was viewed to a greater degree than ever before as unenlightened. If it had been rationalized earlier because of the perceived “savagery” of the victims, then it was becoming more and more difficult to defend such blatantly savage behavior on the part of European forces.Footnote 73
The Boxer Rebellion concluded just four years after the violent looting of Benin City. There is little evidence that Europeans generally considered the sack of Benin unenlightened, and it is only in recent years that a truly global debate has ensued about the objects’ return to Africa.Footnote 74 The difference in response to these two events within the span of just a few years underscores the disconnect in European attitudes regarding art looting during conflict. These attitudes seemed to vary depending entirely on whose property was being taken and how “civilized” they were perceived to be. The unwritten rules of warfare were that artwork should be safeguarded and not pillaged, unless and until the enemy was considered culturally or racially inferior and, therefore, unworthy of their own artistic production.
The restitution of artwork that took place after the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 may be taken as the chronological starting point for changing ethical norms, particularly in Europe, regarding art plunder during conflict. As these norms evolved, the rules applied differently based on where imperialist forces were fighting and whose property they wished to take. It would be difficult to claim that the objects pillaged during these conflicts were truly war prizes in the traditional sense of the term. Once removed from their place of origin, they were treated as works of fine art. In recognition of these imbalances and unaddressed instances of pillage, works of art taken during conflict that are now in museum collections should be identified as high priority for provenance research.
Museum transparency
Once the process of provenance research has reached a state of completion, the challenge for museums will be sharing the results of that research in a way that is clear to the public and helpful to potential claimants. American museums already have a template for redressing historical wrongs while upholding a high standard of transparency and accountability. Beginning in 1998, many museums launched pages on their websites dedicated to Nazi-era provenance research. Directed by the AAM and the AAMD, a number of institutions shared lists of objects that could have changed hands in Europe between 1933 and 1945.Footnote 75 Other museums posted shorter lists of objects with “red flags”—that is, showing evidence of possible looting or otherwise requiring scrutiny. At the MFA, those selected object records (usually about five at any given time) are annotated with a brief explanation of the museum’s ongoing research; the rest of the collection is searchable online.Footnote 76 No matter the format, however, it is critical to make the results of provenance investigations publicly available.Footnote 77 By their very nature, lists and inventories of high-priority objects invite additional information from scholars, members of the public, and previous owners. This information can assist in curatorial research and, in the event of a successful restitution claim, ensure that museums are holding their collections legally and ethically.Footnote 78
Looking to the model for Nazi-era provenance as a guide, it is proposed that American museums seek to identify objects that were (1) looted or otherwise taken in armed conflict from the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 until the Hague Conventions formally prohibited art plunder in 1899/1907, or later if the museum has not already addressed instances of twentieth-century pillage, and (2) stolen or forcibly removed during a period of colonial rule.Footnote 79 There need not necessarily be chronological parameters for the latter category of colonial thefts and coerced sales, although it seems unlikely for an American museum to be able to trace the removal of objects in its collection earlier than the nineteenth century. These two categories comprise those works of art that can be defined as stolen or forcibly traded. It is not proposed to include objects demonstrably made for trade or sale or objects whose colonial-era provenance is completely unknown.Footnote 80
Museums have the capacity to create sections or pages of their websites dedicated to colonial-era provenance. Depending on the size and scope of the collection, they can develop either a long list of all works of art removed under colonial rule or a shorter list of high-priority objects. By listing them, American museums would accomplish two aims. First, they would acknowledge and draw attention to the contentious histories of objects in their collections in a way that is comparable to how they have addressed other historical periods in other parts of the world. This step is important not just for public accountability but also to ensure museums are being consistent in how they document and share their collections. This consistency in turn reflects how successfully a museum is upholding its collection policy. Second, museums would signal openness to engaging with source communities, whether about a physical return of an object, loans, storage, display, educational initiatives, or other matters of care. Indeed, these communities may be in the best position to offer information about the works of art themselves, advising on which, in fact, are the objects most likely to have been traded or sold under duress.
Resolving ownership disputes
Whether faced with a formal restitution claim or having uncovered evidence of a theft on their own, American museums will need to decide whether to restitute colonial-era looted art and, if so, on what grounds. Whenever a museum votes to deaccession a work of art and remove it from public view, or utilizes its funds to resolve an ownership dispute, it must have a clearly articulated reason for doing so. Every decision about restitution sets an internal precedent. The board (or other governing body) must ensure that these decisions are in keeping with the museum’s collection policy and their own fiduciary responsibilities.Footnote 81 Declaring that works of art that are deaccessioned and restituted are “gifts” to previous owners, for example, suggests that any work of art from the museum collection may be handed over as a gesture of goodwill and magnanimity rather than because of an acknowledged break in the chain of ownership.Footnote 82 Providing no reason at all suggests a chaotic approach to collections management and sends an equally confusing message to the public about how museums care for their holdings.Footnote 83 It is therefore important for each museum to set a clear framework for considering colonial-era claims in order to ensure that its collection is indeed held in the public trust and not broken up haphazardly.
To date, restitutions from American museums have been generally rooted in legal precedent rather than in purely ethical principles. Works of art looted during the Nazi era have never been lawful to trade; indeed, the Department of State worked for years following World War II to ensure the restitution of plundered art that ended up within US borders. There were a number of postwar restitution laws in Europe, but the Department of State turned to the 1907 Hague Convention (among other instruments) to justify seizing and returning war loot.Footnote 84 Legislation in many archaeologically rich countries determines whether objects excavated from their soil may be licitly exported and sold in the United States.Footnote 85 The art world may have turned a blind eye to such laws and regulations for years, but the recent restitution of Nazi-looted art and illicit antiquities is not the result so much of a sudden application of new standards as it is of enforcing existing ones.Footnote 86 Works of art like the Benin bronzes, on the other hand, have been openly bought and sold for more than 100 years without any known litigation over their colonial-era provenance. In fact, for much of the twentieth century, being able to trace an object to the time of its colonial-era removal was considered reassuring to a buyer as there was little chance that the object had been recently stolen or trafficked. Any restitution of such material today will need to be based upon ethical principles rather than a strict interpretation of the law.
It is not possible retroactively to prohibit a group or category of objects from trade, and not many paradigms exist in the United States for the restitution of materials that, like colonial-era looted art, may be on the market legally. There is one notable exception that applies to many American museums. For years, Native American tangible heritage—including human remains, burial goods, sacred objects, and items of cultural patrimony—changed hands freely in the United States and ended up in museum collections. Native American cultural heritage is, generally speaking, legal to buy and sell today.Footnote 87 In 1990, however, the United States passed the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), which applies to federal agencies, museums, and other institutions receiving federal funds.Footnote 88 These agencies and museums must supply inventories of their holdings of Native American human remains and associated funerary goods and summaries of unassociated funerary goods, sacred objects, and inalienable cultural patrimony to federally recognized tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations.Footnote 89 Under NAGPRA, there is a clear procedure laying out how tribes can make claims for this property.Footnote 90
The framework for NAGPRA will differ from any framework that can be considered for colonial-era claims for several reasons. First, modern governments (such as the Republic of Benin, Nigeria, and China) have sought the recovery of, and, in some cases, received, property taken during nineteenth-century periods of war and colonization, with the aim of preserving those objects in national museum collections.Footnote 91 Indigenous tangible heritage, on the other hand, which has been displaced under both colonial rule and settler colonialism, has ongoing significance to the living culture from which it originated—and its return is considered by many to be a matter of human rights rather than property rights per se. Footnote 92 While it is not possible to neatly separate Indigenous repatriations from colonial-era returns, American museums may wish to consider whether Indigenous cultural property calls for its own framework for restitution beyond what is governed by NAGPRA.Footnote 93 Second, it is not reasonable to expect new legislation comparable to NAGPRA to regulate art from colonial contexts, which, unlike Native American cultural property, originated outside the United States. Unless there is a clear violation of existing American law, the federal government is not likely to dictate the deaccessioning decisions of private museums, nor is it likely to pass legislation regarding the disposition of foreign-made works of art within its borders.Footnote 94
Despite these differences, NAGPRA is a useful model because it shows how claimants can recover objects that are otherwise legal to buy and sell, while museums prioritize the sharing of information and the building of relationships. Many Native American objects have been successfully repatriated under NAGPRA, but others have remained in museums and are cared for and curated with the cooperation of tribal representatives.Footnote 95 Regardless of whether repatriation is the end result, the input of tribal communities is key. The aim is to restore to them some agency over their own cultural heritage and preclude museums from making unilateral decisions about their Indigenous collections.
The success of any colonial-era provenance initiative will likewise depend on the transparency of American museums and their willingness to engage in a dialogue with source communities. Sharing information is easier today than ever before; many, if not most, museums have the capacity to make their collections globally accessible through their websites. To that end, there should be nothing to prevent museums from documenting the provenance of objects removed under colonialism—fully, from the time of their removal (if known) to the present—and making that information available online. Source countries and communities can more easily locate these objects and, if they wish to make a claim, are able to do so. Deaccessioning and restitution may be the result in some cases, but they need not be the primary objective. Some countries may have requests beyond a physical return, wanting instead to collaborate on issues of care, display, and interpretation of the objects, advise on cultural sensitivity, or collaborate on educational initiatives and professional training opportunities. As an ethical matter, colonial-era claims can be resolved by the parties creatively and according to the circumstances of the case.
No matter what the model for resolving disputes over the ownership of works of art, thorough research, transparency with the research results, and a willingness to enter into a conversation with potential claimants must guide the process. Restitution claims should always be assessed on a case-by-case basis, and resolutions sought in a just and fair manner. The last 30 years have witnessed dramatic shifts in the ethics of acquiring, curating, and restituting art. This is because the highest standards in collecting inevitably and continually change: there is no beginning or end to the process. These ethical standards are shifting again. American museums have an opportunity to take an active role in researching, documenting, and openly discussing the sometimes uncomfortable histories of their works of art that changed hands during the colonial era and redressing these historical wrongs with their communities of origin.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank, in particular, my curatorial colleagues at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, for our thoughtful conversations on colonialism and provenance, and my peer reviewers for their insightful comments on this article.
Competing interests
None.